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Volume 12, Number 5—May 2006
Letter

Enrofloxacin in Poultry and Human Health

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To the Editor: Following logic similar to that recently used by the US Food and Drug Administration to withdraw approval for enrofloxacin, a recent letter estimated that fluoroquinolone use in poultry could compromise responses to antimicrobial drugs in >24,000 persons per year in the United States (1). However, >99.9% of this estimated risk appears to result from incorrect assumptions. Potentially important corrections include the following: 1) not attributing resistance from foreign travel and human ciprofloxacin use to domestic use of enrofloxacin in poultry (this could reduce the estimated risk by ≈1/3) (2); 2) updating the estimated fraction of human foodborne Campylobacter infections caused by poultry to reflect declines in microbial loads on chicken carcasses since 1992 reduces the estimated risk by a factor of perhaps 1/10 (3) (the cited 90% estimate by Hurd et al. [1] was intended for use as part of a conservative upper-bounding analysis, not as a realistic point estimate); 3) replacing an assumption that 10% of infected persons would benefit from antimicrobial drug therapy with a more data-based value of 0.6% (4) would reduce the estimated risk by a factor of 0.6/10 = 0.06; 4) replacing an assumption that fluoroquinolones are prescribed for all affected patients receiving antimicrobial drug treatment (rather than, for example, erythromycin) by a more realistic value of fluoroquinolones being prescribed for perhaps ≈50% of patients (2) reduces the estimated risk by a factor of ≈50%; 5) replacing an assumption that all such cases lead to compromised responses with a more data-driven estimate that perhaps ≈17% of patients have compromised responses would reduce the estimated risk by a factor of 1/6 (5); and 6) recognizing that reducing enrofloxacin use may not decrease fluoroquinolone resistance in all Campylobacter spp. from food animals (effect not quantified) (6). Together, such changes reduce the estimated risk by a factor of at least (1/3) × (1/10) × (0.6/10) × (1/2) × (1/6) = 0.00017, or by >99.9%.

More notably, the calculation in (1) also wrongly assumes that the fraction of patients with fluoroquinolone-resistant infections times the fraction of infections caused by poultry gives the fraction of patients with compromised response caused by fluoroquinolone use in poultry. As a simple counterexample, suppose that 80% of all infections were caused by poultry, with the rest caused by something else (e.g., water), and that all and only the 20% of infections caused by the latter source are resistant. Then the procedure in (1) would estimate (80% of infections caused by poultry) × (20% of infections resistant) = 16% as the fraction of resistant infections caused by poultry, even though the correct answer is zero. Thus, the basic logic of the calculation is flawed.

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Louis Anthony Cox*†
Author affiliation: *Cox Associates, Denver, Colorado, USA; †University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado, USA

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References

  1. Collignon  P. Fluoroquinolone use in food animals [letter]. Emerg Infect Dis. 2005;11:178990.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  2. Cox  LA Jr. Quantitative health risk analysis methods: modeling the human health impacts of antibiotics used in food animals. New York: Springer; 2005.
  3. Stern  NJ, Robach  MC. Enumeration of Campylobacter spp. in broiler feces and in corresponding processed carcasses. J Food Prot. 2003;66:155763.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  4. Busby  JC, Roberts  CT, Lin  J, MacDonald  JM. Bacterial foodborne disease: medical costs and productivity losses. 1996 [cited 2006 Mar 22]. Washington: US Dept of Agriculture, Economic Research Service. Agricultural economics report 741. Available from http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/aer741/
  5. Sanders  JW, Isenbarger  DW, Walz  SE, Pang  LW, Scott  DA, Tamminga  C, An observational clinic-based study of diarrheal illness in deployed United States military personnel in Thailand: presentation and outcome of Campylobacter infection. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2002;67:5338.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  6. DANMAP—Use of antimicrobial agents and occurrence of antimicrobial resistance in bacteria from food animals, foods and humans in Denmark. 2005 Jul [cited 2006 Mar 22]. Available from http://www.dfvf.dk/Files/Filer/Zoonosecentret/Publikationer/Danmap/Danmap_2004.pdf

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Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid1205.051477

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In response: Cox's letter (1) contains a number of false assumptions, errors, misleading assertions, and misquotations. Cox asserts that annually 1 person or fewer in the United States will experience an adverse effect because of fluoroquinolone use in poultry. He reduces 10-fold my referenced risk for persons acquiring Campylobacter infections from poultry (2). His unrealistically low estimate is not given in his referenced citation. His estimated risk is also much lower than in the reference 2, which Cox himself quotes, "Poultry is the most common cause of sporadic cases of campylobacteriosis in the United States" (Economic Research Service of the US Department of Agriculture) (3). Cox knows that his assertion (4) that poultry make little or no contribution to human Campylobacter infections has been extensively examined and found to be wrong. Indeed, an entire section in a recent US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) determination was written about the unreliability of Cox's testimony and these assertions, a finding made by both the FDA commissioner and an administrative law judge (5,6).

Cox also misquotes Busby et al. (3) when he asserts that only 0.6% of persons with Campylobacter infections benefit from antimicrobial drugs. The Busby article states that 0.6% of persons with Campylobacter infections need "hospitalization," not how many would benefit from antimicrobial drug therapy. Cox has thus made a misleading attribution (something he has previously been found to do [5]).

Busby et al. (3) estimated that in 1993, ≈1,500,000 persons in the United States acquired Campylobacter infections from food sources. Even if the proportion who can benefit from receiving antimicrobial drugs is as low as 2%, this translates to 30,000 persons. If 20% of these infections were caused by fluoroquinolone-resistant Campylobacter spp., then 6,000 persons would potentially have their therapy and outcome compromised, rather than the 1 person that Cox would have us believe. More realistic is the figure of 24,000 persons estimated previously to be at risk of having an adverse outcome (or ≈285 persons for every 1 million chickens treated with fluoroquinolones) (1). Cox's assumptions and calculations thus seem flawed and unrealistic.

Address for correspondence: Peter Collignon, Infectious Diseases Unit and Microbiology Department, The Canberra Hospital, Australian National University, PO Box 11, Woden, ACT 2607, Australia; email
Author affiliation: *The Canberra Hospital, Woden, Australian Capital Territory, Australia

References

  1. Cox  LA. Enrofloxacin in poultry and human health [letter]. Emerg Infect Dis. 2006;12:8723.DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  2. Collignon  P. Fluoroquinolone use in food animals [letter]. Emerg Infect Dis. 2005;11:178990.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  3. Busby  JC, Roberts  T, Jordan Lin  C-T, MacDonald  JC. Bacterial food-borne disease: medical costs and productivity losses. [cited 2006 Mar 8]. Agricultural Economics Report No. (AER741). Washington: United States Department of Agriculture; 1996. Available from http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/aer741/
  4. Phillips  I, Casewell  M, Cox  T, DeGroot  B, Friis  C, Jones  RN, Does the use of antibiotics in food animals pose a risk to human health? A critical review of published data. J Antimicrob Chemother. 2004;53:2852.DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  5. US Food and Drug Administration. Final decision of the commissioner. Proposal to withdraw the approval of the new animal drug application for enrofloxacin for poultry [cited 2006 Mar 8]. Docket no. 2000N-1571. p. 16–7; 108–19. Available from http://www.fda.gov/oc/antimicrobial/baytril.pdf
  6. US Food and Drug Administration. Initial decision. Withdrawal of approval of the new animal drug application for enrofloxacin for poultry [cited 2006 Mar 8]. Docket no. 00N-1571. p. 13–5. Available from http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/dailys/04/mar04/031604/00n-1571-idf0001-vol389.pdf

Table of Contents – Volume 12, Number 5—May 2006

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Page created: January 12, 2012
Page updated: January 12, 2012
Page reviewed: January 12, 2012
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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